Donald Trump made
a triumphant entrance during the first night of the Republican National Convention
on Monday, receiving a raucous ovation from the party faithful two days after a
would-be assassin's bullet grazed his right ear.
Trump walked into the Fiserv Forum
in downtown Milwaukee with a thick bandage over the ear as the crowd chanted “Fight!
Fight! Fight” and pumped their fists, a reference to his reaction in the
moments after he was wounded.
The former president mouthed the
words "Thank you" and settled into a box with some of his children
and US Senator JD Vance, Trump's choice for running mate announced earlier in
the day.
Trump is due to formally accept the
party's nomination in a prime-time speech on Thursday and will face Democratic
President Joe Biden in
the November 5 election.
The four-day convention began less
than 48 hours after a gunman opened fire at a Trump rally in Butler,
Pennsylvania, killing one supporter. The gunman was shot dead and his motive
remains unclear.
During Monday's session, the party
gave speaking slots to six everyday Americans who highlighted the impact
inflation has had on lower and middle-income families, while Republican leaders
assailed the Biden administration
as being out of touch.
Senator Tim Scott, who briefly ran
against Trump for the nomination, said divine
intervention spared Trump's life.
“Our God still saves,” Scott said. “He
still delivers and he still sets free. Because on Saturday the devil came to
Pennsylvania holding a rifle, but an American lion got back up on his feet and
he roared!”
Vance, 39, was a fierce Trump critic
in 2016 but has since become one of the
former president's staunchest defenders, embracing his false claims
that the 2020 election was marred by widespread fraud.
Vance is deeply popular with Trump's
core supporters, but it remains to
be seen whether he can broaden the ticket's appeal. He shares
Trump's aggressive approach to politics, and his conservative statements on
issues such as abortion could turn off moderate voters.
Soon after Trump's afternoon
announcement, Vance emerged on the convention floor with his wife Usha, shaking
hands with and hugging delegates who swarmed the couple. He is scheduled to
address the convention on Wednesday.
REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS AT ISSUE
Biden told reporters at Joint Base
Andrews in Maryland that Vance is “a clone of Trump on the issues,” while other
Democrats criticized Vance's record on reproductive rights.
In an interview on Fox News on
Monday night, Vance said he backed Trump's position that each state should
decide for itself whether to permit abortion.
Opinion polls show a close race
between Trump, 78, and Biden, 81, though Trump leads in several swing states
that are likely to decide the election. Trump has not committed to accepting
the results of the election if he loses.
The head of the main fundraising
super PAC supporting Trump's campaign, Taylor Budowich, said on X that MAGA Inc
had raised more than 50 million dollars on Monday.
Billionaire
Elon Musk is planning to donate around 45 million dollars a
month to a new pro-Trump super PAC, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing
people familiar with his intentions. Musk endorsed Trump after the
assassination attempt on Saturday.
Following the shooting, Trump said
he was revising his acceptance speech to emphasize national unity, rather than
highlight his differences with Biden.
“The speech will be a lot different,
a lot different than it would've been two days ago,” Trump told the Washington
Examiner.
The day began with yet another in a
string of recent legal victories for Trump, when US District Judge Aileen
Cannon threw out
federal charges accusing him of retaining classified documents
after leaving the White House.
Trump is due to be sentenced in New
York in September for trying to cover up a hush money payment to porn star
Stormy Daniels in the weeks before his 2016 election victory.
But his other two indictments on
federal charges in Washington and state charges in Georgia - both related to
his efforts to overturn his 2020 election defeat - are mired in delays and
could be significantly limited after the US Supreme Court ruled in July that he
had immunity for many of his official acts as president.
“This dismissal of the Lawless
Indictment in Florida should be just the first step, followed quickly by the dismissal
of ALL the Witch Hunts,” Trump said on Truth Social on Monday, also referencing
the prosecutions of hundreds of his supporters who stormed the US Capitol on
Jan. 6, 2021.
NO PLACE FOR VIOLENCE
The shooting attempt on Trump's life
immediately altered the dynamics of the presidential campaign, which had been
focused on whether Biden should drop out due to concerns about his age and
acuity following a halting June 27 debate performance.
Nearly two dozen of Biden's fellow
Democrats in Congress have called on him to end his reelection bid and allow
the party to pick another standard bearer.
The focus this week will be squarely
on Trump.
Having consolidated party control,
Trump could seize on the opportunity to deliver a unifying message or paint a
dark portrait of a nation under siege by a corrupt leftist elite, as he has
done at times on the campaign trail.
Trump has frequently turned to
violent rhetoric in campaign speeches, labeling his perceived enemies as “vermin”
and “fascists.”
Biden has cast Trump as a threat to US
democracy, comments that some Republicans say helped foster
an atmosphere that prompted the shooting even though
authorities have yet to determine the
motive for the assassination attempt.
Following Saturday's shooting, Biden
sought to lower the temperature after months of heated political rhetoric.
“There is no place in America for
this kind of violence,” Biden said in an address from the White House on
Sunday.
In an interview with NBC News on
Monday, Biden said it was a
“mistake" to tell donors last week it was "time to
put Trump in the bullseye” but noted that Trump has often used incendiary
words.
Biden ordered an independent review
of how the gunman could have come so close to killing Trump. Congressional
investigators also sought to question the head of the US Secret Service, which
is responsible for protecting the former president.